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1765.16139 Babbitt, Uncle Tom's Cabin, and Rip Van Winkle
This paper analyzes three novels by answering certain questions on "Babbitt" by Sinclair Lewis, "Rip Van Winkle" by Washington Irving, and "Uncle Tom's Cabin" by Harriet Beecher Stowe.
Pages: 14
Bibliography: 2 source(s) listed
Filename: 16139 Ameican Literature Novels.doc
Price: US$125.30
1766.16150 The Power and the Glory: An Analysis
This three-page undergraduate essay analyzes the important role of children in Graham Greene's 1940 novel, The Power and the Glory. The author notes that the role of the children is important because they personify faith and the inherent goodness of the human soul. To support this theme, the author created young characters such as the illegitimate daughter of a whiskey-drinking protagonist, who hates him, and whose love he wants more than anything in the world; and a boy who meets the priest at the beginning of the novel and whose life is changed by the priest's death as a martyr.
Pages: 3
Bibliography: 2 source(s) listed
Filename: 16150 Power And Glory.doc
Price: US$26.85
1767.16161 An Analysis of Self-Deceit in Who Do You Think You Are?
No synopses, ask reprensentative for more information.
Pages: 3
Bibliography: 3 source(s) listed
Filename: 16161 Alice Munro Novel.doc
Price: US$26.85
1768.16171 Spring - Comparison Between Spenser and Carew
Spring is a time of bringing life to earth as it breathes upon the flowers, trees, birds, and animals. Edmund Spenser and Thomas Carew describe "spring" in different ways, yet they both use similar methods of literary tools. Personification, romanticism, images, alliteration, and metaphors are literary tools that the writers use to paint a picture of springtime. Spenser and Carew set the mood for the poem in different ways. Spenser's poem seems to call spring to arise and get ready for love. "Make haste therefore, sweet love, whilst it is still prime, for none can call again the passed time." It is as if he wants the earth to wake and get ready to bring life anew to the earth.
Pages: 4
Bibliography: 0 source(s) listed
Filename: 16171 Poetry Techniques Comparison.doc
Price: US$35.80
1769.16182 "The Dream of the Rood" An Analysis of Pagan Elements
This three-page undergraduate essay analyzes the Old English poem, "The Dream of the Rood" and examines the overshadowing of Christian elements by pagan elements. The author notes that this can be explained by the historical context of the poem, for the author felt compelled to include pagan elements as a co-opting tool in order to convert them to Christianity. Since the thematic focus of the poem is the victory won by Christ over sin, the tactical use of pagan elements that perhaps overshadow Christian elements is justified by the strategic goal of converting pagans to Christianity.
Pages: 3
Bibliography: 2 source(s) listed
Filename: 16182 Dream Of Rood.doc
Price: US$26.85
1770.16185 Perfection and Seeking One's Soul
What is perfection when it comes to age, sex, politics, love, fiction, and life? Does aging alter the perfection of one's self? Do men more perfect than women? Do those in politics have a higher sense of who they are? When it comes to searching for perfection, how do you know that you have reached a higher perception of perfection of who you are? This paper will discuss perfection and the soul's search to find a higher sense of self through analyzing Hamlet, Cicero, and Wolf.
Pages: 3
Bibliography: 3 source(s) listed
Filename: 16185 Cicero Hamlet Woolf.doc
Price: US$26.85
1771.16200 A Close Reading of "The Tigers Bride"
A close reading of a passage is different than analyzing a portion of text, yet it is similar in many ways. "The candles dropped hot, acrid gouts of wax on my bare shoulders. I watched with my furious cynicism peculiar to women whom circumstances force mutely to witness folly, while my father, fired in his desperation by more and yet more draughts of the fire water they call "grappa", rids himself of the last scraps of my inheritance. When we left Russia, we owned black earth, blue forest with bear and wild boar, serfs, cornfields, farmyards, my beloved horses, white nights of cool summer, the fireworks of the northern lights. What a burden all those possessions must have been to him, because he laughs as if with glee as he beggars himself; he is in such a passion to donate all to The Beast." This paper does a close reading of the above text. It discusses punctuation, diction, features of sound, sentence types, and the sense the speaker gives to the passage.